The World Health Organization (WHO) is moving its regional malaria
office from Bangkok to Phnom Penh to be closer to the epicenter of the
problem and fight against drug-resistance in western Cambodia.
A coordinator for the project is scheduled to arrive here on
Wednesday to start setting up the new office and scaling up the fight,
said Steven Bjorge, the WHO’s malaria team leader in Cambodia.
When the coordinator in Bangkok retired last year, he said, “The
office…took upon itself to see if a Bangkok office made sense or not.
They said let’s either consider Cambodia or Myanmar because these are
two countries still facing resistance on a daily basis.”
With malaria already relegated to a “minor” problem in Thailand, the
WHO settled on Cambodia, both because it was more easily accessible by
air than Burma and because it had the most acute problem with growing
drug resistance.
“In Cambodia, it’s more front and center,” Mr. Bjorge said. “The drug
resistance problem is more severe here than in any of the other
countries.”
Though Artemisinin-based Combination Therapies (ACTs) remain
effective in Africa and most of Southeast Asia, resistance has been
growing along the Thai-Cambodian border since health workers first
detected it there in 2007. Resistance has also started to show up in
Vietnam and—most recently—in Burma.
But it is in Cambodia’s Pailin province that ACTs are failing the
fastest. The region has already gone through two variations of ACTs
since 2007 and tests are expected to start soon on the efficacy of a
third before it is finally rolled out.
Health workers still do not know whether the signs of resistance
showing up in Vietnam and Burma developed on their own or spread from
Cambodia. What they fear most is that it will spread to Africa, where
most of the more than 600,000 annual malaria deaths occur.
To keep that from happening, the WHO in 2009 started a region-wide
project to contain the malaria strain showing ACT resistance with a
two-year, $22.5 million grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation.
With a new combined $15 million grant to cover the next three years
from the Gates Foundation and AusAid, the Australian government’s
foreign aid arm, Mr. Bjorge said the WHO will work with Cambodia and its
neighbors to scale up the work they have already started.
“We’ll have more people working out of the hub and staff in the various countries,” he said.
The WHO has already started advertising for a permanent coordinator and hopes to have one in place within three months.
The regional office will take shape amid allegations of “serious
financial wrongdoing” by the Cambodian government’s National Malaria
Center (CNM) in its handling of separate malaria grants from the Global
Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.
The Global Fund has yet to release a report of its investigation or
any other details, however, and will not say how much money was
allegedly misspent, only that it amounted to less than half-a-million
dollars.
A CNM deputy director, Chea Nguon, declined to comment and referred
questions to director Char Meng Chuor, who could not be reached.
Despite the alleged misspending and growing drug resistance, Cambodia has registered major gains against malaria.
The number of infections and deaths have dropped steadily since the
containment project was launched. Registered infections dropped by more
than 14,000 cases to 51,752 between 2011 and 2012. Deaths over the same
period dropped from 77 to 40.
And, in its annual World Malaria Report released last month, the WHO
identified Cambodia as one of eight countries in the Western Pacific
region to have cut its infection rate by 75 percent or more since 2000.
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